Assessing Knowledge of Evidence-BasedPractice among Nurses

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Walden University ScholarWorks Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies Collection 2016 Assessing Knowledge of Evidence-BasedPractice among Nurses Suja Merin John Walden University Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations Part of the Educational Administration and Supervision Commons, and the Nursing Commons This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies Collection at ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact ScholarWorks@waldenu.edu.

Walden University College of Health Sciences This is to certify that the doctoral study by Suja John has been found to be complete and satisfactory in all respects, and that any and all revisions required by the review committee have been made. Review Committee Dr. Andrea Jennings-Sanders, Committee Chairperson, Health Services Faculty Dr. Sophia Brown, Committee Member, Health Services Faculty Dr. Janice Belcher, University Reviewer, Health Services Faculty Chief Academic Officer Eric Riedel, Ph.D. Walden University 2015

Abstract Assessing Knowledge of Evidence-Based Practice among Nurses by Suja Merin John MSN, FNP, Molloy College, New York, 2000 BSN, College of Nursing, Vellore, India, 1985 Proposal Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Nursing Practice Walden University February 2016

Abstract Evidence-based practice (EBP) is used worldwide to improve the quality of patient care to provide cost-effective care. EBP is a mandate for nursing practice combining individual clinical judgment with available expertise to generate a positive outcome for the patient. Investigators have documented that nurses have varying degrees of confidence and knowledge about EBP. The purpose of this project was to improve knowledge of EBP among registered nurses (RNs). The ACE Star Model of Knowledge transformation was used as the conceptual model. The key project question was to assess the level of knowledge and confidence about EBP among RNs in a cardio-thoracic (CT) intensive care unit (ICU) before and after viewing a computer-based EBP educational module. The quasi-experimental project used a 1 group pretest posttest design. In the pretest, a convenience sample (n = 29) completed ACE-ERI competencies to self-assess confidence in EBP and an EBP Knowledge Test. The participants then viewed an EBP educational module based on major steps in EBP practice. Afterward, they repeated both tests. As a group, the paired t test showed a significant increase in scores for the ACE-ERI competencies between pretest and posttest scores. Using the Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test, knowledge scores increased but were not statistically significant. These findings suggested that there was improvement in both confidence and knowledge supporting the use of the educational module. In order to effectively implement EBP, nurses require knowledge to assess the quality and evidence for improved patient outcome. These results can guide administrators and educators to enhance RN EBP by the use of educational modules to improve the quality of patient care creating positive social change.

Assessing Knowledge of Evidence-Based Practice among Nurses By Suja Merin John MSN, FNP, Molloy College, New York, 2000 BSN, College of Nursing, Vellore, India, 1985 Project Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Nursing Practice Walden University February 2016

Dedication In all things, trust in God and lean not into our own understanding I give my thanks and praise to God Almighty for giving me courage when I was discouraged, for always guiding me in the right path and providing resources, strength and hope needed to complete this project. I dedicate this paper to my loving husband and children. Thank you for your understanding, encouragement, and support throughout this journey.

Acknowledgments I would like to thank Dr. Andrea Jennings-Sanders and Dr. Lily Thomas for their support and guidance. Your knowledge and wisdom have guided me throughout this process. I could not have completed this project without their guidance and expertise. I extend my thanks to my friends and colleagues for their support and encouragement.

Table of Contents List of Tables... iv List of Figures...v Section 1: Nature of the Project...1 Introduction.... 1 ProblemStatement...3 Purpose Statement...7 Project Question...7 Project Objectives...7 Significance and Relevance to Practice...9 Evidence Based Significance of the Project...12 Implication for Social Change in Practice...13 Definition of Terms...15 Assumptions and Limitations...16 Summary...16 Section 2: Review of Literature and Theoretical and Conceptual Framework...18 General Review of Literature...18 Specific Review of Literature...20 Systematic Reviews...20 Assessing Evidence-Based PracticeKnowledge Among Nurses...21 i

The Establishment of Evidence-Based Practice Competencies...22 Readiness of U.S Nurses for Evidence-Based Practice...22 Factors Influecing the Development of Evidence-Based Practice...24 Evidence-Based Practice Models...26 Quality Improvement and Evidence-Based Practice...26 Conceptual Model/Theoretical framework...27 Section 3: Methodologys...31 Population and sampling...33 Data Collection...33 Instrument...35 Protection of Human Subjects...36 Data Analysis...37 Project Evaluation Plan...38 Summary...38 Section 4: Findings, Discussion, and Implications Summary of Findings...39 Discussion of Findings in the Context of the Literature and Frameworks...46 Implications...47 Implications for Practice/Action...47 ii

Implications for Future Research...47 Implications for Social Change...48 Project Strengths and Limitations...48 Section 5:Recommendations and Self Assessment...50 Recommendations for Remediation of Limitations...50 Analysis of Self...50 As Scholar...50 As Practitioner...51 As Project Developer...51 Summary and Conclusions...52 References...54 Appendix A: Informational Letter...63 Appendix B: Demographic Information (Clinicians)...65 Appendix C: ACE EBP Readiness Inventory...67 Appendix D: EBP Knowledge Test...70 Appendix E: Educational Model Review...73 Appendix F: Permission to Use ACE-ERI Tool...74 iii

List of Tables Table 1. Timeline for Assessing Evidence Based Practice Knowledge...34 Table 2. Paired ample Statistics for ACE Scale Pre-survey and Post-survey...41 Table 3. Spearman Correlation Coefficients...42 Table 4. T-Test...44 iv

List of Figures Figure 1. Elements of EBP..12 Figure 2. ACE Star Model...29 v

Section 1: Nature of the Project 1 Introduction Evidence-based practice (EBP) is recognized globally. The translation of evidence into practice has a role in ensuring quality care, patient safety, and improved patient outcomes (Smith& Donze, 2010). Nursing care is advancing to the point where it is not enough to deliver treatment interventions. Rather, it is essential that it provide significant role in ensuring quality care, essential that it provide quality care using the best available evidence. EBP, therefore, is emerging as a widely accepted paradigm for professional nursing practice. Numerous researchers claim the fact that EBP fosters quality health care, improved health outcomes, and reduced health care costs (Melnyk, Fineout-Overholt, Gallagher-Ford, & Kaplan, 2012; Melnyk, Gallagher-Ford, Long, & Fineout-Overholt, 2014; Pravikoff, Tanner, & Pierce, 2005). In addition to the three benefits listed above, EBP can also reduce rising health care costs, assist changes in professional roles with updated current knowledge to identify clinical problems. It incorporate new evidence into clinical practice reduce medication errors, implement the best care knowledge for patient care for the proper clinical decision making and patient outcomes(rycroft-malone & Bucknall, 2010; Stevens,2013;White&Dudley-Brown, 2012). The Institute of Medicine (IOM) reported in To Err is Human (2000) that health care in the United States was in a poor state. The report has since become a rallying call for evidence-based, knowledge-driven improvements in health care in order to improve more desirable outcomes. The EBP movement was accelerated by the publication of two

landmark reports, Crossing the Quality Chasm (IOM, 2001), and Future of Nursing 2 (IOM, 2011). They have become key components in the redesign of health care. IOM also sponsored a landmark summit on education in the health professions and recommended five competencies for nurses: (a), providing patient-centered care, (b), applying QI principles, (c), working in interprofessional teams, (d), using EBP, and (e) using health information technologies (IOM, 2003, p. 49). EBP is a systematic approach to problem solving that enables RNs to use the best evidence available for clinical decision-making in order to provide the best patients outcomes (Pearson, Field, & Jordan, 2007). As health care and nursing practice advance to accommodate today s demanding health care needs, the 2005-2007 Research and Scholarship Advisory Committee of the nursing society Sigma Theta Tau International (2008), described evidence-based nursing as an incorporation of the best evidence available, nursing expertise, and the values and preferences of the individuals, families, and communities who are served.to deliver care based on evidence, nurses need to know how to access, evaluate, integrate it. Evidence-based interventions facilitate optimized patient outcomes that have the greatest chance of success (Melnyk&Fineout-Overholt, 2011).

3 Problem Statement EBP means integrating best evidence with clinical expertise and patient values (Sackett, Strauss, Richardson, Rosenberg, & Hynes, 2000). Implementing EBP is challenging, because it depends on the willingness of the individual RN and senior leadership to embrace and promote practice in a changing health care environment that is based on research (Titler, 2010). According to Pravikoff et al. (2005), RNs are not ready for EBP due to the gaps in their information literacy and computer skills, their limited access to high quality information resources, and their attitudes towards research. Since nurses graduate from different academic programs, there is typically a gap between training and practice, and this creates variations in their knowledge. As a result how they practice, is based on what they learned in school and on their shared experiences in the clinical settings (Melnyk& Fineout-Overholt, 2011). There are several obstacles to implementing EBP in nursing practice: lack of education about EBP in academic settings, lack of knowledge among nurse leaders, attitudes about EBP, use and future use of EBP, are multiple barriers ( Melnyk &Fineout-Overholt,2011;Shirey,2006; Gerrish, Ashworth, Lacey,& Baily,2008). A reduction in the gap between theory, practice, and EBP skills is essential for all nurses. Because EBP integrates the best research evidence with clinical expertise and patient preference (Melnyk& Fineout-Overholt, 2011; Sackett et al., 2000), it is the key for QI (IOM, 2001) Every day, nurses participate in patient care actions and interventions that lead to questions about the evidence supporting their use. The IOM (2011) has set a goal by 2020, 90% of all health care decisions in the United States will integrate evidence-based

research with clinical expertise and patient values, and that nurses will participate in 4 learning and research activities as much as feasible The IOM Future of Nursing report (2011) focuses on knowledge in clinical decision-making, quality, interpersonal team development, and EBP to transform health care. The recommendations focus on knowledge, quality, and new functions in nursing to lead interprofessional teams to improve health care delivery (Stevens, 2013). EBP is a problem-solving approach to clinical care that integrates the meticulous use of current evidence from well-designed studies, clinical expertise, and patient values and preferences. Fundamental to EBP is the nurse s ability to practice critical thinking, clinical judgment, and clinical synthesis (Malloch& Porter-O Grady, 2006; Melnyk & Fineout-Overholt, 2011; Sackett et al., 2000; White & Dudley-Brown, 2012). EBP is a process that begins with research and ends with practice. With advancement in EBP, will come documented practice changes, practice guidelines, utilization patterns, advanced use of informatics, and workforce retention (Melnyk, et al, 2014). As EBP integrates clinical expertise with external clinical evidence, nurses will better understand the systematic approaches to rational decision-making to facilitate best practices (Newhouse, Dearholt, Poe, Pugh, & White, 2005). According to the IOM report of 2001, Crossing the Quality Chasm, the gap between the health care we have and the care we could have is in actuality a chasm. Ineffective, costly, and harmful health care led to the EBP movement, to redesign health care to be efficient, cost effective, timely, and patient-centered by using evidence from best practices (Stevens, 2013; White & Dudley-Brown, 2012). The key factors

5 acknowledged for all health care professionals to bridge the quality chasm (IOM, 2003) are provision of patient-centered care, multidisciplinary team work, evidence-based care, quality improvement, and the utilization of informatics (Stevens& Staley, 2006). Nurses are crucial members of the EBP team because of their clinical knowledge and expertise; thus, successful implementation of EBP, creative thinking, and advancement in technology can promote health care quality. EBP, a process in which clinical research findings or best available evidence is enhanced by clinical expertise and patient preferences and incorporated into practice settings, is widely promoted internationally (Smith& Donze, 2010). Increasing demand for patient safety, quality, and cost-effective care requires a change in healthcare and the transformation of best evidence into practice. EBP is a major health care initiative worldwide, recommended by the IOM, the Joint Commission, and the American Nurses Credentialing Center, which awards Magnet status as essential to practice by healthcare (AACN, 2008). Nursing education has a vital role in preparing future nurses for integrating best evidence and practice. It is crucial to educate RNs to acquire EBP knowledge and competencies in order to deliver safe, high quality, patient centered care. In an era of health care reform, an acceleration of EBP is essential to improve quality health care and patient outcomes, along with lower health care cost (Sredl, Melnyk, Hsueh, Ding, & Durham, 2011).

6 The preparation and education of the nursing workforce is crucial for the success of a new paradigm in health care safety and QI as EBP becomes integrated into practice (Stevens& Staley, 2006). The paradigm shift will take place when nurses begin to think about research results and plan for improvement and the transformation of health care. Adopting the EBP movement will provide a high quality of care, better health outcomes, reduced health care costs, greater nurse autonomy in their practice and greater job satisfaction for nurses,but preparation for nurses to engage in EBP is limited (Melnyk, Fineout-Overholt, Stillwell, & Williams, 2009). According to White and Dudley-Brown (2012), critical thinking is the foundation for EBP and a systematic search for solutions; a critical appraisal of the most relevant evidence and the evaluation of current practice are needed to answer clinical, educational, or administrative questions. Increasing demand for patient safety, quality, and cost-effective care requires a change in healthcare and the transformation of best evidence into practice. EBP is a major health care initiative worldwide, recommended by the IOM, the Joint Commission, and the American Nurses Credentialing Center, which awards Magnet status as essential to practice by healthcare (AACN, 2008). Nursing education has a vital role in preparing future nurses for integrating best evidence and practice. It is crucial to educate RNs to acquire EBP knowledge and competencies in order to deliver safe, high quality, patient centered care. In an era of health care reform, an acceleration of EBP is essential to improve quality health care and patient outcomes, along with lower health care cost (Sredl,Melnyk,Hsueh,,Ding,& Durham, 2011).

7 Purpose Statement The purpose of this project is to assess EBP knowledge among nurses in a cardiothoracic intensive care unit (ICU). The call for nurses to become full partners in redesigning health care emphasizes the potential impact of EBP in nursing (Stevens, 2013). Health care is a complex and it is a rapidly changing industry with advances in technology and research and a growing gap between knowledge and practice (Melnyk& Fineout-Overholt, 2011). EBP represents a paradigm shift that requires nurses to think about research results and better patient care and thus transform health care (Stevens, 2013). Evidence needs to be incorporated into practice to provide effective patient outcomes. Introducing EBP knowledge into a 23-bed cardio-thoracic unit is imminent to identify the nurses aps in knowledge about evidence in nursing practice in a cardiology unit as well as how this knowledge can enhance nurses confidence in clinical decision making. Project Question and Objectives The project question for this study was as follows: Is there a lack of knowledge about EBP process among RNs in cardiothoracic unit? The project has two objectives: Assess the level of knowledge and confidence about EBP among RNs) in a CTU after viewing the educational module about EBP. Differentiate EBP, quality improvement, and research.

With regard to the first objective, it is important to note that the founder of modern 8 nursing, Florence Nightingale, used statistical evidence to guide policy decisions and health care reform to improve mortality rates (McDonald, 2001). Nightingale used her time and energy to determine the best available evidence (McDonald, 2001). As mentioned before, the IOM established a goal that by 2020, 90% of all health care decisions made in the United States will be evidence-based, with nurses able to practice to the full extent to their education (IOM, 2010). Advancing knowledge and skills in the EBP process will equip nurses to take ownership in their practice and help to transform health care. EBP provides a process for changing practice to improve patient care, but to redesign healthcare, nurses need to embrace EBP as a best clinical practice for 21 st century health care ( Melnyk, et al, 2014; White & Dudley-Brown, 2012). EBP is a process that nurses can confidently employ to improve patient care because nurses are essential members of the EBP team given their clinical knowledge and expertise (Smith & Donze, 2010). Although EBP improve patient outcomes, EBP mentors are needed to provide continuing education to enhance nurses/ EBP knowledge and skills (Melnyk, et al, 2012). The second objective of this project was to determine the knowledge nurses have to differentiate among the key features of research, EBP, and QI) for providing the best evidence. EBP is the key to QI (IOM 2001) and is defined as the integration of best research evidence with clinical expertise and patient preference (Sackett et al., 2000). QI is the systematic approach to improving specific internal systems, processes, performance, and productivity for optimal delivery of care and optimal patient outcomes.

9 Research is a scientific process that validates and refines existing knowledge. It directly and indirectly influences nursing practice or health systems (Shirey et al., 2011). QI, EBP, and research are interrelated and RNs can avoid confusion with appropriate knowledge of terms (Hedges, 2009). According to Melnyk and Fineout-Overholt (2011, p11), the EBP process consists of seven steps: Cultivating a spirit of inquiry to know the evidence related to the practice, Formulating a clinical question in PICOT format (patient population intervention or issue of interest, comparison intervention or group, outcome, and time frame), Searching for and collecting the most relevant best evidence, Synthesizing the evidence to develop recommendations, Integrating the best evidence with one s own clinical expertise, Patient preferences and practice decisions, Evaluating outcomes of the practice decision or change based on evidence and disseminating the outcomes of the EBP decision or change. Significance and Relevance to Practice Though there is a spirit of inquiry for EBP, health systems worldwide are moving towards spreading EBP, the baseline knowledge and readiness of nurses need to be determined (Pravikoff et al., 2005). According to Stevens (2013) new knowledge must be transformed into clinically useful forms and it must be implemented across the health care system. Finally, EBP must be measured in terms of its impact on performance and health outcomes. Traditionally, nurses have used research in clinical setting poorly due to (a) lack of time, (b) lack of understanding of research findings, (c) inability to relate findings to clinical practice, and (d) insufficient power to bring about clinical changes (Upton, 1999). For

EBP to be implemented successfully and sustained, it must be adopted by individual 10 providers, microsystems like high performing clinical units, system leaders, and policy makers (Stevens, 2014). The blueprint for health care redesign was advanced in the IOM (2001) quality chasm report; a key recommendation from the nation s experts was to bridge the chasm between knowledge and practice using EBP. Nurses are challenged to stay current with advanced information to provide the highest quality of care (IOM, 2011). The IOM and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation strongly recommend that nurses practice to the full extent of their education and achieve higher levels of education and training to meet the competencies required for patient care. To redesign health care, nurses must move out of their comfort zone, and use evidence-based knowledge to care for their patients and their families. According to Melnyk and Fineout Overholt (2011), EBP is crucial in the overall health care delivery system because it can help reduce escalating health care costs, save time, afford better patient outcomes, and provide nurses with more autonomy in their practice, (which can ultimately lead to greater job satisfaction and increased retention). However, even though EBP as a theoretical framework has the potential to enhance nursing practice, a majority of nurses do not avail themselves of opportunities to find practice information because they have little or no training in using database searches to find evidence for their practice (Bertulis, 2008). The Quality and Safety Education for Nurses (QSEN) initiative has adapted the IOM competencies to improve quality and safety in the health care system (Cronenwett et

al., 2007). These competencies include patient-centered care, teamwork and 11 collaboration, evidence-based practice, quality improvement, safety, and informatics. Faculty members have addressed the challenge of preparing nurses to improve quality and safety, helping educate nurses to develop EBP competencies and recognize patient preferences and values as part of their clinical expertise (Cronenwett et al., 2007). To build substantial support for EBP, according to Stevens (2013), requires new evidence forms, new roles, new teams, new practice cultures, and a new field of science. Implementation of a practical approach to EBP should be considered, to assist staff nurses to evaluate evidence and then translate evidence into practice. Time, resources, and support from the nursing leadership is needed, along with collaboration between hospital leaders and academic nursing (Newhouse et al., 2005). Elements of Evidence-Based Practice EBP is the integration of best evidence with clinical expertise and patient values (Sackett et al., 2001). The best research evidence is based on patient-centered research studies; clinical expertise requires one s own knowledge and skills to determine each individual patient s unique problems and values, bringing the patient s perspectives into health care decisions (Melnyk& Fineout-Overholt, 2011). EBP is the foundation for excellent patient care, quality improvement, and best patient outcome (Burns& Grove, 2010). Figure X. illustrates the interaction of EBP elements.

12 Quality Patient Outcome Figure It is 1: The elements of EBP. (Sackett, et al, 2001). Evidence-Based Significance of the Project This research sought to determine if there is a lack of knowledge regarding EBP process among RNs in cardiothoracic unit. According to Pravikoff et al. (2005), RNs are not ready for EBP due to the gaps in their information literacy and computer skills, their limited access to high quality information resources, and their attitudes toward research. EBP is the integration of best evidence with clinical expertise and patient values (Sackett, et al., 2001). Implementing EBPs is challenging and complex; the success of implementation depends on individual RNs, senior leadership, and the changing health care arena, which has been averse to embracing and promoting an EBP environment (Titler, 2010). According to the IOM (2011) by 2020, 90% of all health care decisions in the United States will be evidence-based. To provide a high-quality patient care, nurses need to incorporate evidence into their practice (Newhouse et al., 2005). Evidence can be used

for effective and efficient patient care practices such as health care processes, policies 13 and procedures, clinical practice guidelines and administrative practices (Houser& Oman, 2011). The gap between nurses graduating at different levels creates a difference in their knowledge and their practice, their experiences and what is shared in their clinical practice areas. Every day, nurses are involved in actions and interventions that raise questions about the evidence supporting their use. The average time to translate published research evidence into practice takes about 17 years (Balas& Boren, 2000). The shift toward EBP reduces the research-practice gap and improves the quality and safety of patient care. Integrating the principles of EBP can be used as a problem solving framework to the best evidence. According to Melnyk & Fineout-Overholt (2011). Given its effective translation of evidence into practice, EBP can reduce cost, save time and result in better patient outcomes. As noted earlier with the effective practice changes with EBP, patients will get a high quality of care, better health outcomes, reduced health care costs, and nurses will experience greater autonomy in their practice and a higher job satisfaction. (Melnyk, et al., 2009). Implications for Social Change in Practice Critical thinking is the foundation for EBP and a systematic search for solutions. Critical appraisal of the most relevant evidence and the evaluation of current practice is required to answer clinical, educational, or administrative questions (White& Dudley- Brown (2012). The Future of Nursing report focuses on knowledge in clinical decisionmaking, quality, interpersonal team development and evidence and EBP to transform health care (IOM, 2011). Innovation, creative thinking and advancement in technology

14 can promote health care quality and a positive social change in health care. EBP is widely promoted internationally and it is a process in which clinical research findings or best available evidence is enhanced by clinical expertise, patient preferences and is incorporated into practice settings (Smith& Donze, 2010). In today s complex health care environment, nurses need a comprehensive understanding of the quality and safety issues that affect patient outcomes. To make a social change in the society, nurses need to embrace EBP in their daily practice. The resulting knowledge and competency will transform health care delivery so that it is safer, higher quality, and more cost effective (American Association of Colleges of Nursing [AACN], 2008). Stevens (2013) suggested that although the impact of EBP has initiated a spirit of inquiry in nursing practice, education, and science, evidence-based QI is key to redesigning health care so that it is effective, safe, and efficient. Stevens asserted that any initiative should include practice adoption, education, and curricular realignment, model and theory development, scientific engagement in the new fields of research, and the development of a national research network to study improvement. In addition, Stevens asserted that the EBP movement has great potential for improving care and health outcomes and closing the chasm between the health care environments as it exists now and to transform the health care environment. Stevens noted that in a recent survey of the state of EBP, nurses had positive attitudes toward EBP and wished to gain more knowledge and skills, despite significant barriers in practice. To accomplish these challenges, Stevens argued that nurses need to be creative and master teamwork to redesign the health care system, be persistent in education, employing awareness, skills,

15 and power to improve systems of care and systems research from multiple perspectives and with sound evidence. Stevens (2013) noted that to move EBP forward and bring about change, nurses will need to become powerful leaders of interprofessional groups. Definitions of Terms The following terms are used in this research project: Registered nurse (RN): An RN is a graduate nurse who has passed a state board examination and been registered and licensed to practice nursing (Mosby's Medical Dictionary, 2009). EBP (EBP): EBP is the integration of best evidence with clinical expertise and patient values (Sackett et al., 2001). EBP knowledge: defined as self-reported EBP knowledge, it will be measured by using the EBP knowledge questions in the ACE-EBP Readiness Inventory (ACE-ERI) (Stevens, 2004). It will represent the pretest knowledge phase. EBP readiness: defined as self-reported confidence to perform EBP competencies (Stevens, 2004). Evidence-based decision making: the integration of best research evidence in decision making about patient care, clinician s expertise, and patient preferences and values (Melnyk& Fineout- Overholt, 2011). Level of evidence (hierarchies): a ranking of evidence by the type of design or research methodology that would answer the question with the least amount of error and provide the most reliable findings (Melnyk& Fineout-Overholt, 2011).

16 The Star Model of Knowledge Transformation: a model for understanding the cycles, nature, and characteristics of knowledge that are utilized in various aspects of EBP (Stevens, 2004). Inventory (ACE-ERI): This inventory will allow self-assessing of one s confidence in EBP (EBP) competencies (Stevens, 2004). Knowledge transformation: Knowledge transfer is a systematic approach to capture, collect, and share knowledge to obtain explicit knowledge (White& Dudley- Brown, 2012). Assumptions and Limitations In this project it was assumed that the RNs in the project setting, a cardiothoracic unit, had no exposure to EBP education. The limitations of this study was the selection of nurses in one particular unit and the fact that some nurses might have had prior learning/ experience on EBP. The generalizability of this study is limited since the project was to be implemented in one selected unit, which might or might not be representative of other units. Summary The concept of evidence-based nursing practice is predicated on sustaining safe and quality health care and is key to quality and excellence in nursing. To enhance knowledge and skills among nurses in different health care systems, there is a need to implement interventions to promote EBP mentors for safe and quality care based on the best evidence. Implementation of evidence is essential so that patients can have quality and safe care in order for them to receive the best outcomes possible. Adoption of EBP

competencies for nurses can assist organizations to achieve high- quality, low-cost, 17 evidence-based health care outcomes.

Section 2: Review of Scholarly Evidence 18 General Review of Literature This section aims to present a review of the literature on EBP knowledge among nurses. EBP is a problem-solving approach in clinical practice that closes the gap between theory and practice and emphasizes effective nursing care (Upton& Upton, 2006; Youngblut& Brooten, 2001; Stevens, 2013; Newhouse et al., 2005; Stevens & Staley, 2006; Rosswurm& Larrabee, 1999; Brady & Lewin, 2007; Leach, 2006). Several articles have reported that nurses at all educational levels lack the knowledge to appraise research studies critically and the skills to effectively implement EBP in their clinical settings (Moore& Watters, 2012). In 2001, the IOM named EBP as one of the five core competencies for all health care professionals. Along with the IOM, the Joint Commission and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (AACN) recommend EBP as essential knowledge for health care providers in order to deliver the best patient care (Smith& Donze, 2010; Mallory, 2010). The purpose of this literature review is to investigate the project question against existing evidence to assess EBP knowledge among nurses. Although EBP is proved as the best medical practice to achieve optimum healthcare outcome, adoption of EBP among nurses is relatively low (Melnyk et al., 2014; Melnyk et al., 2012; Stevens, 2013;Pearson et al., 2005; Pravikoff et al.,2005;neville & Horbatt, 2008; Jutel, 2008;Moch,Cronje & Branson,2010). Effective managerial leadership, administrative support, change leadership and expert EBP mentors are essential to enable nurses to use research evidence in clinical practice to promote EBP (Sanares, Waters &Marshall, 2007;

Shirey, 2006; Melnyk et al., 2012; Sandstrom et al., 2011; Cherim et al., 2010; Cronje 19 &Moch, 2010; Hastings&Fisher, 2014). The search strategy was aimed at finding both published and unpublished studies in English for the period 2000-2014 [the more typical range is 5 years]. A three-step approach was used. An initial, limited search of MEDLINE/PubMed, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, and CINAHL was undertaken, followed by analysis of key words contained in the titles, abstracts, and index terms used to describe the articles. There were 2,976 articles were reviewed. A second search was undertaken, using all of the identified key words and index terms identified across all included databases. Third, the reference lists of all identified reports and articles were further searched for studies that had been missed in the electronic searches. The following databases were used: CINAHL, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, EMBASE, ERIC, PubMed, Turning Research into Practice (TRIP), ProQuest Dissertations and Theses, Health and MEDLINE Simultaneous Search, Ovid Nursing Journals, Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE), Joanna Briggs Institute EBP database, Google Scholar, and Web of Science. The following keywords were used: Evidence-based practice, medicine, nursing, readiness, competence, process, skills, barriers, and knowledge transformation. Grey literature was sought in the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), QUEST, and Primary Care Clinical Practice Guidelines. The initial search resulted in 2,976 articles; the second search, which was limited to articles published from 2000 2014, yielded 30 articles.

20 Specific Review of Literature Systematic Reviews The specific literature review uncovered systematic reviews about nurses knowledge, skills, and attitudes for evidence-based practice, cross-sectional descriptive studies on assessing EBP knowledge among nurses, studies on developing EBP competencies, and the readiness of nurses for EBP. Search Outcome Among 30 relevant articles, 8 articles met the inclusion criteria: (Leung, Trevena, & Waters, 2014; Upton & Upton, 2006; Squires et al., 2011; White-Williams et al., 2012; Melnyk et al., 2014; Bostrom, et al., 2009; Thiel &Ghosh,2008; Sredl et al., (2011). A review conducted by Leung, Trevena, and Waters (2014) on instruments for measuring nurses knowledge, review skills, and attitudes for EBP included 91 studies identified for full-text; 59 studies representing 24 different instruments met the inclusion criteria. This systematic review summarizes the psychometric properties of instruments used to measure EBP knowledge, skills, and/or attitudes of nurses. The authors postulate that EBP knowledge and skills refer to one s ability to formulate a question in response to a clinical problem, retrieve the best available evidence from various sources, appraise the strength of evidence, apply evidence in the client s best interest and values, and assess the effectiveness to determine improvement in patients or practice. The study concluded that valid and reliable instruments are required to measure EBP competence of nurses, to develop curricula, and to evaluate the effectiveness of various educational competencies for EBP. The revised Evidence Based Practice Questionnaire (EBPQ)(Upton& Upton,

2006) was found to have adequate validity and feasibility to be used in practice. The 21 questionnaire relies on self-report; however, the authors suggested that a performancebased instrument is needed to measure EBP knowledge, skills, and attitudes in nursing. A systematic review by Squires et al. (2011) included 51 cross-sectional/survey and 4 quasi-experimental designs. The study was designed to determine the extent to which nurses use research in their practice. The majority of the 55 articles (n = 39, 71%) were conducted in North America; 12 were conducted in Europe with 3 conducted in Asia and 1 conducted in Oceania. The study highlighted multiple major limitations in the use of research, including the quality of the methodology, lack of robust quasiexperimental studies, lack of standardized language, use of self-report measures, and a lack of standard measures for comparison. The authors concluded that an awareness of the EBP movement has influenced research use in nurses daily practice Assessing EBP Knowledge among Nurses A cross-sectional descriptive study was conducted by White-Williams et al. (2013) to assess use, knowledge, and attitudes toward EBP among nursing staff; data were collected from 593 nurses. This study used the Advancing Research and Clinical Practice through Close Collaboration (ARCC) model as a theoretical framework. Subjects completed a 15-item demographic instrument and the Evidence Based Practice Questionnaire (EBPQ Upton & Upton, 2006). Correlations and multivariate analysis of covariance were used for statistical analysis. Internal consistency reliability was reported for the EBPQ. Overall Cronbach s alpha was 0.87; for the Practice, Attitude, and Knowledge/Skills subscales, Cronbach s alphas were 0.85, 0.79, and 0.91, respectively.

22 The results of this survey showed that 96% of nurses reported that they were aware that an EBP and Research Council existed. Average scores were highest on the Attitude subscales, followed by the Knowledge/Skills and Practice subscales. The authors concluded that education level and leadership status have a positive correlation with increased practice, knowledge, and attitudes regarding EBP and that an EBP workshop has a positive effect on practice and attitude change. The Establishment of EBP Competencies Though research supports that EBP promotes high-value health and high quality health care, improves patient outcomes and reduces cost, EBP is not the standard of care globally. Melnyk, Gallagher-Ford, Long, and Fineout-Overholt (2014) reported that seven national EBP leaders developed an initial set of clear EBP competencies for practicing RNs and APNs through a consensus-building process. The authors concluded that incorporation of EBP competencies into a health care system can lead to higher quality of care, greater reliability, improved patient outcomes, and reduced costs. The main limitation of this study was the use of a convenience sample of nurses who attended an EBP immersion workshop; this sample could have rendered biased results. Readiness of U.S. Nurses for Evidence-Based Practice A search of CINAHL plus Full Text of the initial search using the search terms EBP and EBP readiness revealed 32 peer-reviewed articles. Limiting the search to 2000-2014 yielded seven articles. A review of articles related to the need for EBP supported the lack of readiness on the part of nurses and the various barriers to teaching EBP as a process.

23 In 2005, Pravikoff et al. examined perceptions regarding access to evidencebased tools in a random sample of 3,000 RNs across United States. The authors evaluated nurses awareness of the importance of using EPB, availability of information resources, and individual and institutional barriers to the use of research and EBP. Pravikoff et al. concluded that RNs were not prepared to use the information resources available to them, had little or no education or training in database search, and were not prepared for a practice built on evidence. The primary individual barriers to nurses use of research practice were found to be lack of time, lack of value for research in practice, lack of understanding of electronic databases, difficulty accessing research materials, limited computer skills, difficulty understanding research articles, limited access to computers and access to a library, lack of search skills, poor understanding about research, and lack of skills to critique or synthesize the literature. Institutional barriers included difficulty recruiting and retaining staff, other priority goals, budgetary issues, and lack of knowledge about EBP. The authors concluded that RNs in the United States are not ready for EBP for these reasons and strongly recommended integrating EBP curricula into nursing education, stating that a multifaceted approach that involves students, educators, clinicians, and administrators is needed to facilitate change. In 2008, Thiel & Ghosh (2008) assessed readiness for EBP in a moderate-sized acute care hospital in the Midwestern United States before implementation of a hospitalwide nursing EBP initiative. This cross-sectional survey included 121 RNs who completed a 64-item nurses readiness for EBP survey completed a 64-item nurses readiness for on information needs, knowledge, skills, culture, and attitudes. The survey

24 is a streamlined tool with established reliability and validity; it can be used at individual sites for baseline assessment and to provide direction in planning EBP initiatives. The survey found that in the sample had access to technological resources and had the ability to engage in basic information, but not in higher level evidence gathering. Factors Influencing the Development of Evidence-Based Practice Melnyk et al. (2004) conducted a descriptive survey with a convenience sample of 160 nurses who were attending EBP conferences or workshops in four states in the Eastern region of United States. The survey demonstrated that there is a negative correlation between participants beliefs about the benefits of EBP and knowledge of EBP. The authors affirmed that although federal agencies are ready to proceed with EBP changes, the motivation among nursing staff is slow due to various reasons, including misconceptions about evidence-based care, lack of EBP knowledge and skills, and implementation barriers. The Trans-theoretical Model of Organizational Change and the Control Theory were used to guide this research. The authors recommended that health care systems implement interventions to increase EBP knowledge and skills, provide access to EBP mentors to facilitate implementation, and overcome barriers for proper targeting of interventions. McCloskey (2008) used a descriptive, non-experimental mailed survey designed to explore nurses perceptions of research utilization in a corporate health care system. The survey postulated that educational level and hospital position can be positively integrated to promote research utilization and EBP initiatives among all nurses. Nurses in five hospitals were surveyed using the Research Utilization Questionnaire (RUQ). The

RUQ measures nurses perception of research utilization, attitudes toward research, 25 availability of research resources, and perceived support for research activities. ANOVA analysis of the data showed a significant difference in the use of research, attitude, and availability. No significant differences were found among participants based on their years of experience. The author concluded that educational level is an important factor in research. Gerrish, Ashworth, Lacey, and Bailey (2008) reported on factors influencing the development of EBP as identified by junior and senior nurses. This study took place at two hospitals in England, using the EBPQ. The questionnaire was given to 1,411 nurses; 598 responded. It was found that nurses depend on personal experience and communication rather than on formal source of knowledge. The authors recommended the development of a nursing culture to empower change and to engage in supporting EBP activities. Cronenwett, et al. (2007) addressed the challenge of preparing nurses with the requisite competencies to improve quality and safety of patient care. The Quality and Safety Education for Nurses (QSEN) competencies for quality and safety are based on patient-centered care, teamwork and collaboration, evidenced-based practice, quality improvement, and informatics. They emphasized the importance of knowledge, skills, and attitude improvement in all aspects of nursing care to enhance patient-centered care and safety and stressed the role of nursing education developing these competencies in nursing students. To transform care at bedside and to improve patient care and safety, nursing education must be in line with QSEN competencies.

26 EBP Models A framework or model facilitates a systematic translation of new knowledge into practice and enhances the chances of successful implementation (White& Dudley- Brown, 2012). It can provide a skeletal set of variables applicable for all types of individuals, groups, and a wide variety of situations (Rycroft-Malone& Bucknall, 2010). Schaffer, Sandau, and Diedrick (2013) summarized the important features and assessed the usefulness of six EBP models with regard to their fit for practice settings. They evaluated: 1) the ACE Star Model of Knowledge Transformation, 2) Advancing Research and Clinical Practice through Close Collaboration (ARCC), 3) the Iowa Model, 4) the Johns Hopkins Nursing Evidence-Based Practice Model (JHNEBP), 5) Promoting Action on Research Implementation in Health Services Framework (PARIHS), and 6) the Stetler Model. The Johns Hopkins and the ACE Star models were deemed useful for highlighting the process of finding and evaluating evidence that is beneficial for nurse educators, but the authors noted that organizations may prefer the PARIHS framework, ARCC, or the Iowa Model for their emphasis on team decision-making. The evidencebased program, Team Strategies and Tools to Enhance Performance and Patient safety (Team STEPPS, AHRQ, 2008) has proven effective in reducing patient safety issues. Quality Improvement and EBP Evidence-based QI is a systematic approach to improve specific internal systems, processes, performance, and productivity for optimal care delivery and patient outcomes (Shirey, et al.). QI, EBP and Research have interrelated like a three legged stool and nursing practice is the seat of the stool (Hedges, 2006). QI incorporates the knowledge,

27 EBP translates the knowledge and research generates knowledge. To improve the quality and standards of nursing care the expectations to articulate QI, EBP and research development continues to excel (ANCC, 2009). QI strategies need to base on strong evidence to close the gap between clinical researches and practice and to build the evidence on EBP (Shojania& Grimshaw, 2005). In conclusion, studies reviewed in this literature review highlights the significance of need for EBP knowledge and skills among nurses, importance of implementation of EBP be key solution in health care reform, and implications for nurse leaders to be powerful leaders in interprofessional disciplines to redesign healthcare delivery. All studies recommended the need for EBP knowledge and skills among nurses to improve quality and safety of patient care. Theoretical Basis The conceptual model most appropriate for this project is the ACE Star Model of Knowledge Transformation (Stevens, 2004).This model was developed by Kathleen Stevens and staff at the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio to provide a framework for understanding the cycles, nature, and characteristics of knowledge used in the EBP process. It provides an inclusive framework to organize EBP processes and approaches to convert evidence into clinical decision-making. The model explains how various stages of knowledge transformation reduce the volume of scientific literature and provide forms of knowledge that can be directly incorporated in care and decision-making.

28 The model is a five-point star (Figure 2), with each point representing a stage in the EBP process as follows (Stevens, 2012). 1. Discovery of new knowledge is found through traditional research. In this stage knowledge is generated by research methodologies. 2. During this stage, evidence from all research knowledge is synthesized into a single, integrative review and a meaningful statement of knowledge. 3. Translation of research evidence is converted to clinical practice recommendations. At this stage of transformation, the knowledge reflects best practice based on best research evidence. 4. Integration is accomplished through clinical decision-making that leads to a change of practice. 5. Evaluation is done according to patient outcomes, provider/patient satisfaction, and efficiency. This step is crucial to verify the success of EBP. It is important to include patient, health care provider, and system outcomes in evaluation. Figure2: The ACE Star model of knowledge transformation. Copyrighted material (Stevens, 2012). Reproduced with expressed permission.

29 The ACE-EBP Readiness Inventory (ACE-ERI) is an assessment tool that measures the students or nurses self-report of confidence in the ability to apply EBP. Reliability, validity, and use of the ACE-ERI indicate that the instrument is sound and can be administered via online survey or through the use of pencil-and-paper to students and participating nurses (Stevens, 2013). The ACE Star model is related to this project in five different stages. During the first stage of discovery, new knowledge will be discovered through traditional research. In the second phase, nurses will gather evidence and appraise the evidence, synthesizing the research into a single meaningful statement of knowledge. During the third phase of translation, research evidence will be translated to develop recommendations for clinical practice. The integration/implementation phase is applicable for change of